This is for the person who has fallen into temptation and can’t get out, for the husband who has neglected his wife, for the mother who left the store without paying, and for the college student who’s struggling to stay pure. This post is for you.

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Our culture is consumed with busy schedules and perennial exhaustion. This often happens when we book our schedules to create the perception of overload, to feel productive, or to boost our self-esteem.

Perhaps this is because of pressure to succeed, to become something, to prove ourselves. But as Christians, we should be asking ourselves why this is the case. Is busyness biblical? How does it affect our faith and worldview? And what does scripture say?

What’s in your seminary toolbox? Do you have the right study tools to help you succeed? What’s your chance of making it through?

When you dig into scripture but don’t feel like you have the right study tools, it can be frustrating. Sure, you can buy all the right books, run a dozen Google searches, or pull out your trusty commentary hoping to find the right information, but there has be a better way.

Do you remember your first job? Chances are, it was low paying, low prestige, and if anything like mine, you counted the minutes until quitting time. The best thing about my first job was that I knew it was temporary—I had no doubt that it was not part of my career path and I’d move on to bigger and better things.